Revista Brasileira de Cineantropometria e Desempenho Humano (Dec 2018)

No acute effect of whole-body vibration on Roundhouse kick and countermovement jump performance of competitive Taekwondo athletes

  • Mariana Paulino Oliveira,
  • Darryl Cochrane,
  • Marcos Daniel Motta Drummond,
  • Maicon Rodrigues Albuquerque,
  • Pedro Augusto Santos Almeida,
  • Bruno Pena Couto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5007/1980-0037.2018v20n6p576
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 6
pp. 576 – 584

Abstract

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Little is known about the effect of whole body vibration (WBV) has on specific sports action such as taekwondo kicking technique. Fifteen individuals (10 males and 5 females; 18.6 ± 2.1 years), performed two experimental protocols on separate days: A) 1 minute exposure at 26 Hz frequency of WBV followed by countermovement jump (CMJ) test; B) 1 minute exposure at 26 Hz frequency of WBV followed by kick test. A Student’s t-Test analysis was performed to evaluate the difference between performance before and after vibration intervention. The CMJ height means (cm) were 34.1 ± 6.4 before and 34.2 ± 6.5 after WBV exposure. The CMJ maximal force means were 1582.6 ± 214.3 before WBV and 1595.7 ± 205.0 after WBV, while Impulse means (N.s) were 283.3 ± 48.6 before WBV and 282.6 ± 46.6 after WBV. The kick time means (ms) were 219.9±20.31 before WBV and 218.9±19.81 after WBV. No significant differences were found regarding the application of mechanical vibration for all variables. Thus, the vibration intervention (1 minute of WBV at 26 Hz and 6 mm) adopted in this present study may have not been substantial to improve Roundhouse kick time (p=0.73), jump height (p=0.80), maximal force (p=0.78) and impulse (p=0.38) of taekwondo athletes. Future studies should investigate new vibration protocols (amplitude, frequency) and training (intensity, exercise, duration) to determine optimal parameters.

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